Ahmad Hardy
Ahmad Hardy is an American college football running back for the Missouri Tigers. He previously played for the Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks.Hardy was born in Brookhaven, Mississippi and grew up in the small town of Oma, Mississippi. He attended Lawrence County High School in Monticello, Mississippi. As a senior, he rushed for 2,442 yards and 27 touchdowns, before committing to play college football at the University of Louisiana at Monroe.Louisiana–Monroe
Hardy earned immediate playing time as a true freshman. In his collegiate debut against Jackson State, Hardy rushed for 103 yards and a touchdown in a 30–14 win. Against Troy, he rushed for 94 yards and the game's only touchdown, leading the Warhawks to a 13–9 victory. Against Southern Miss, he totaled 174 all-purpose yards, while rushing for two touchdowns in a 38–21 win. Hardy finished his freshman season rushing for 1,351 yards and 13 touchdowns, before announcing his intentions to enter the transfer portal. Hardy was named the Sun Belt Freshman of the Year and also received first-team all-conference honors at the end of the season.On December 18, 2024, Hardy announced that he would be transferring to the University of Missouri to play for the Missouri Tigers. On September 13, 2025, Hardy rushed for 250 yards on 22 carries and scored three touchdowns against the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns. This total ranks as the seventh-highest single-game rushing performance in Missouri history and is tied for the 22nd-most rushing yards in a game by a Southeastern Conference player. On November 15, 2025, in Missouri's 49–27 victory over Mississippi State, Hardy rushed for 300 yards and 3 touchdowns on 25 carries, becoming only the second Missouri player to have 300 rushing yards in a game, the other being Devin West in 1998 against Kansas. Hardy's rushing total was also the third-highest in a game in SEC history, behind Darren McFadden of Arkansas in 2007 and Tre Mason of Auburn in 2013. Hardy is the second Missouri player to rush for 250 or more yards in two separate games in a season, after West did this twice in 1998.